Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Filling in the Blanks

Shelby County Assessor Cheyenne Johnson, a Democrat, will not be running for reelection and instead will be supporting the candidacy of Shawn Lynch, a legal adviser in her office and the son of well-known local businessman and civic figure Terry Lynch.

Shelby County Commissioner Heidi Shafer, now in her second term, has not been bashful about proclaiming a desire to serve in the state legislature.

​During last year’s Republican primary for the then-open 8th District congressional seat, ultimately won by current Congressman David Kustoff, Shafer loyally and fully supported her employer, George Flinn, in whose medical office she serves. But, if state Senator Brian Kelsey had won instead and made it all the way to Washington, there was little doubt among those who know her that she would have been a definite contender to succeed him in the state Senate.

And there is little doubt, either, that the surprise victory last year of Democrat Dwayne Thompson over GOP incumbent Steve McManus in state House District 96 gives her a target to go after as soon as next year, when Thompson has to run for reelection.

​All Shafer will say for the record regarding such a contest is, “I’m looking at it.” But Thompson indicated Saturday at the annual Sidney Chism political picnic on Horn Lake Road that he is expecting a challenge from Shafer and is girding for it.

As has long been known, Chism himself will be back on the ballot in 2018, running for Shelby County mayor. The former Teamster leader and longtime Democratic political broker served an interim term in the state Senate and two full terms on the commission, chairing that body for two years running, until he was term-limited off.

​But he may have serious opposition in the Democratic primary for county mayor. Word going around the picnic grounds at his event on Saturday was that state Senator Lee Harris is getting strong encouragement to seek the office, which incumbent Republican Mark Luttrell, now in his second term, will have to vacate because of term-limit provisions in the county charter.

​Among those reportedly urging Harris to run for county mayor is University of Memphis associate law dean and former Democratic Commissioner Steve Mulroy, a former mayoral candidate who is himself considered a theoretical possibility to seek the office again.

​Harris, who serves as the leader of the five-member Senate Democratic Caucus, has meanwhile embarked on a series of “Senator Lee Harris on Your Street” events at which he promises “updates on the latest legislative bills and issues we tackled in Nashville this year.”   

The Republican side of next year’s mayoral race will feature a showdown between Commissioner Terry Roland, who has been openly running, in effect, for well more than a year, and County Trustee David Lenoir, whose intentions to be a candidate are equally well known.       

It will be interesting to see how Lenoir responds to a gauntlet thrown down by Roland at Monday’s regular meeting of the commission, a four-hour affair that was nearing its end when Roland made a point of notifying Luttrell and County CAO Harvey Kennedy that he intended to seek an amendment to the pending county budget to provide funding for an add-on position sought by Judge Tim Dwyer for the Shelby County General Sessions Drug Court.

To pay for the position, Roland announced that he would offer a resolution at the next commission meeting to strip $50,000 from the amount already allocated to the Trustee’s office. Roland says he can demonstrate that an equivalent sum is currently being paid to an employee of Lenoir’s office who isn’t “showing up for work” — a contention almost certain to bring a hot protest from Lenoir at next week’s committee sessions, where the resolution will get a preliminary vetting.

Roland will also seek to re-allocate $100,000 currently slated to the Juvenile Court Clerk’s office to provide funding for the Shelby County law library, which, he said, faces the threat of closure for financial reasons. He accused state Senator Kelsey of letting a funding bill for the library “sit on his desk” during the legislative session just concluded.

Categories
Opinion

Chisca Hotel, King of Blight: Can It Be Fixed?

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The two big uglies I see most often are Sears Crosstown and the Chisca Hotel. I live near Sears and work near the Chisca, which is just southwest of FedEx Forum so you can’t miss it if you go to events there.

The Chisca is one of those buildings that has an air of inevitability around it because it has been on the downtown landscape for so long. Owned by the Church of God In Christ (COGIC), it was built in 1910 or 1911. It was expanded to include an Admiral Benbow Inn and a parking garage. The Chisca has gotten a bit of attention recently due to an Elvis-era connection via Fifties disc jockey Dewey Phillips and Tony Award winner “Memphis,” the 2009 musical. It separates Beale Street and FedEx Forum from South Main, The Orpheum, and the National Civil Rights Museum. The reddish brick building has painted plywood in the windows.

One of the would-be redevelopers is Terry Lynch. His group’s proposal estimates the cost of renovation at $19.8 million. The group is in the early stages of seeking City Council approval for $2 million in capital improvement funds. Here are excerpts from a recent conversation I had with Lynch.

Why save it?
The alternative is tearing it down and having a vacant lot. One of the big benefits of FedEx Forum was supposed to be economic development around the arena. But it’s still mostly vacant lots and blight that really breaks up the fabric of South Main and the Central Business District.

Is it an old hotel that will always seem like an old hotel?
The original rooms were wide with a lot of windows — this was before air-conditioning — and nine-foot ceilings. So we’re thinking of taking a couple of hotel rooms and making them into a small apartment, with a goal of 149 apartments, with plenty of natural light.

Is there enough demand for housing there?
Our studies show strong demand. The occupancy rate for downtown apartments is above 90 percent. Barboro Flats has been well received. We think a good price point for this would be $750 to $800.

Could it be fully or partly redeveloped and wind up like the empty Horizon on the South Bluff?
The Horizon was a condo building. There is always a risk somebody won’t come. But we think there would be good demand. I don’t think you will find any unsuccessful apartments downtown.

Why undertake this now when it’s been vacant for so long?
It’s a challenging property. In one of the best real estate cycles in years it was passed over. It takes local, civic-minded people to get involved. Either it happens now or it is going to be demolished in the next year or two. It has been in Environmental Court for a couple years and the court will get impatient about it.

Does the proposed $2 million in city funds make that much difference?
Yes it does. Ten percent might not seem like a lot, but it is in this project. It would offset unusual costs of development such as environmental remediation, structural issues, and selective interior demolitions like an old ballroom in there. If you took on a warehouse, you would not have all of that.

Could COGIC benefit financially?
We have a confidentiality agreement so I can’t say much. It would put it behind them. From what we can tell, there are no liens or environmental fines on it.

What would be the development fee?
Typically three to four percent.

Is the Memphis music and nostalgia connection that relevant?
I think so. We’re thinking of taking the old studio on the mezzanine level and rebuilding it on the ground level so people could come and see it.

What’s next?
The council appropriation, then the Downtown Memphis Commission for a PILOT (payment in lieu of taxes), then the Downtown Parking Authority for approval. We feel fairly comfortable about all of them.

Categories
Living Spaces Real Estate

Place Making

Terry Lynch is driving me around the South End neighborhood in downtown Memphis on a recent sunny August morning. The past, present, and future collide in Lynch’s descriptions of the scenery as we glide in his SUV along Riverside, Front, Tennessee, Georgia, Carolina, G.E. Patterson, and the half-dozen other streets that interlace and create natural borders for the Courtesy of Dalhoff Thomas Daws

neighborhood. Lynch explains how South End developed, the work and cooperation and money that is transforming a former industrial area into one of the premier new neighborhoods in the city. His words also conjure images of the community as it will be in a few years, when projects are completed and planned improvements are installed.

Lynch should know. The president of Southland Capital Corporation is one of the key leaders in the South End development. Involved in building the community for about six years, Lynch affects a kind of constant gardener role along these streets, mindful of even the smallest details as he grows and grooms the neighborhood toward completion.

“This is our first pocket park,” Lynch says, like a proud papa, of the fountain standing at the corner of West Georgia and Tennessee. “I cut a deal with Henry [Turley, owner of South Bluffs, which the park adjoins], and we rebuilt that wall. We paid a quarter-million dollars putting this in on this corner. It’s on [Turley’s] property, but it gives you an idea of how we’re committed to making this a connected [neighborhood].”

Among other beautification efforts in South End are new streetlights and street trees. Light poles will be equipped to hang banners touting seasonal events such as the RiverArtsFest or Memphis In May. Railroad underpasses at several key locations have been redone by the city and act as a gateway into the district. The city will also be putting sidewalks, curbs, gutters, and streetlights along Tennessee Street between G.E. Patterson and Georgia.

When Lynch started South End, “it was mostly old industrial uses,” he says. “At that time, we hired Looney Ricks Kiss to help us develop a conceptual master plan to give us some guidance and a plan to develop it so that we didn’t wind up with just a bunch of condominiums but had at the end of the day a mixed-use, New Urbanist-type community.”

These days, Lynch has his own high-profile building in development. Art House, being installed in the Cummins Mid-South building on Riverside Drive and West Georgia Street, is in the design stage under the guidance of JBHM Architects and lead architect Michael Walker. Once it begins, construction on the residential phase will take about 12 to 15 months, with commercial following. All told, it will be about a 30-month process.

Lynch imagines a development that plays nice with the neighborhood.

“We have the site under control, and [there are] public improvement contracts we’re making with the city, so we’re improving the street next to our building, next to our neighbor,” he says. “We can blend and make that a seamless experience, a neighborhood rather than just being isolated to what we’re doing.”

Art House will be a different animal from other downtown condominium developments, Lynch says.

“The quality and the price point will have to be on the high end of the range of where the market is today. So what we’ve had to do is to make something completely unique to the marketplace from a design perspective and from a use perspective.

Terry Lynch

Courtesy of Paradigm Productions

The former headquarters of Cummins Mid-South on Riverside Drive is the site for a new mixed-used development called Art House.

“It takes into account the value of connecting to the external components of this building,” Lynch continues. “The street level will be a very elaborate courtyard, the rooftop deck will be a communal place, and on the street level, there will be restaurants and bars. The South End will actually evolve to the next level of the vision, which is a connected mixed-use, on-street kind of neighborhood.”

The commercial element of Art House promises to be one of the more exciting aspects of the development, especially for South End residents. Among proposed businesses to be located on the ground floor of Art House are a grocery store, bank, coffee shop, restaurants, and health facility. The neighborhood grocery store would be about 12,000 to 15,000 square feet. “We’re working with the Center City Commission and talking with two or three operators to try to create the right incentives to make it happen,” Lynch says.

“The residential will drive the deal,” Lynch says. “We’ve got to do that first before we come back in and do the commercial. But there is a lot of interest because this will be the center commercial hub of the whole development.

“At the same time, we’re trying to get some public commitments from the city to make some infrastructure improvements,” he says.

The goal is to make the neighborhood more pedestrian friendly. In the next few years, there will 1,500 people who live within a football field bordered by Georgia Avenue and Kansas Street, Lynch says. Among that number will be residents of the Horizon, which recently broke ground on its first phase. Art House hopes to fill a void in restaurants and other businesses that are pedestrian friendly.

“That’s the kind of external amenity we see that people are attracted to,” he says. “Having them right at your front door is a big amenity.”

Above the commercial floor, Art House will have three levels of condominiums. All told, it will contain 96 condo units, a central courtyard, a rooftop communal area, and 100 parking spaces for residents in the basement of the building.

“With the Horizon, Art House, and what we’re doing on the street, this encompasses the next phase [of South End],” Lynch says.

“Right now, the market’s been soft to some extent because there was so much inventory that hit the market last year,” he continues. We do see a steady demand, but there had been a lot of product, and a lot of that product is starting to burn off. We’re watching that to see which ones are moving, because we can tweak each of our products. We’re not stupid. We’re not just going to build and assume anything sells.”

The recent nationwide sub-prime crisis hasn’t hit downtown Memphis very hard, Lynch says.

“If you look at the typical buyer for downtown Memphis, very few of them were depending on sub-prime loans to get into the marketplace,” he says. “Overall, the market has been soft. There are a lot of people sitting on the sidelines waiting for the next wave of what the lending products will be. We see the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) as being the new sub-prime lender. That’s what they were before. Starting the first of the year, FHA is going to have a zero-down loan program up to about $275,000.”

Art House looks to position itself at the top of the food chain in terms of price and amenities.

“The kind of product we’re building, we’ve got to be a high price point, because our cost of construction is high,” Lynch says. “So what we’ve had to do is go out in the marketplace and determine what design elements we can incorporate that no one else has. Since we’re starting from scratch, we were able to put in some new design elements. A lot of times you’ve got an existing building and you’ve just got to live with what it is and where it is.”

Lynch is working with Red Deluxe to develop the Art House brand, getting into the psychographics of the people who will live here.

“We’re incorporating that into branding the Art House and embracing the exterior on street elements of what our vision is for South End,” he says. “We’ve studied [potential buyers’] lifestyles to understand how they live: Where the docking stations are for their iPods, where would they want their flat-screen TV, how they cook. What’s more important: more counter space in the kitchen or a vanity in the bathroom or a bigger balcony? We are tring to understand the lifestyle of those people and put those into a design element.

“Rather than somebody saying, ‘I’m getting 1,500 square feet and you’re only giving me 1,200,’ we’re going to have such a wow factor in the 1,200 that they’ll pay us just as much as they would someone else who has 1,500,” Lynch says.

One example of the details considered by his design team: a community library where residents can exchange books. “It’s a concept beyond what they call real estate by the pound, where people are saying there’s something different here.”

Lynch’s design team meets weekly to push and prod floor plans, tweaking them to achieve maximum resident-friendliness.

“We’re thinking our way through how somebody actually functions in these units,” Lynch says. “We are trying to take it one step further, so that in addition to having a floor plan, we’re going to be able to show alternate designs and even furniture placement in these units. We’re going to give [buyers] an allowance that says, okay, here’s how you can express yourself. You decide what’s important to you. Is this a linen cabinet or another flat-screen TV, an upgraded sound system or an upgraded dishwasher?

“Whatever is important to their lifestyle, they can customize the unit,” Lynch explains. “And we’ve already selected it for them. That’s how detailed we’re getting — which we have to.

“We feel like we’ve got to be over the top with this product and over the top with this development to be something unique to the marketplace,” he says.

Lynch doesn’t mince words about his expectation for his project and its place in the South End: “It will change the shape of things down here.” ■